Monday, January 30, 2012

Theo est mort.


A film still from Voyage to Cythera, directed by Theo Angelopoulos. Photograph: Artificial Eye

Costas Douzinas
guardian.co.uk, Friday 27 January 2012

The Greece of Theo Angelopoulos

Forget deficits, debt and corruption. Theo Angelopoulos, the film-maker who died this week, captured the true Greek soul

The sudden death of Theo Angelopoulos, the greatest Greek film-maker, while shooting his latest film on the current troubles, has acquired great symbolic significance. In recent months, reporting on Greece has concentrated on the deficit, debt and the untrustworthiness of its people. The films of Angelopoulos remind us of another Greece and a different humanity. In his dreamlike historical films, he chronicled the melancholic nature of a nation torn between an invented tradition of classical glories and a traumatic history of repressive state policies, dictatorship, corrupt and dynastic politics. He narrated the lowly lives of the defeated in the vicious civil war 1946-9, the degradations and melancholy of exile, the Odysseus-like return of people who go back to a place they nurtured in their memories but turns out alien and unwelcoming.

In his mesmeric long sequences, a simple gesture, a silence or smile acquire philosophical depth and historic significance. This is epic cinema made out of the fragments of everyday life.

Coming from the left, as did most of the Greek cultural renaissance of the second half of the 20th century, but ascribing to no orthodoxy, Angelopoulos described the degradations of ordinary people both in the hands of rightwing governments and in the Stalinist regimes where the defeated partisans retreated but found no haven.

For Angelopoulos, humanity survives in the memories and dreams of exiled, travelling people who never fully make it back to Ithaca. What makes us human, Angelopoulos tells us, is found in traumatic memories, in the desire to preserve an imaginary beauty, and in eternal returns perennially frustrated. Angelopoulos was both the Homer of modern Greece, and the country's magical realist storyteller.

For decades, the Greek elites belittled those cultural achievements that didn't fit their view of modernisation defined as insatiable consumption. The sorry state Greece finds itself in today was built against Angelopoulos's poetry of images. If, for a moment, we put to one side the immediate economic news, a largely unreported dramatic picture of decay of the integrated political, economic and media elites that ran the country for the last 60 years emerges. The implosion of this elite is a textbook study in the collapse of a system of power.

Let me mention some recent symptoms, each of which have occurred in the last month, and which show an elite turning in on itself. First, the head of the Thessaloniki internal affairs division of the financial crimes squad (SDOE) was arrested last week for his participation in a gang of loan sharks and extortion.

Elsewhere, the government is trying to remove two economic crime prosecutors who reported the tax crimes of the rich and asked parliament to investigate the alleged 3% fraudulent increase of the country's deficit by the incoming Papandreou government in 2010. It was this upward revision of the deficit that led to the term "Greek statistics" and brought the troika of the IMF, EU and ECB to Athens.

In another example, a senior cabinet minister admitted that he did not read the memorandum detailing the measures imposed on Greece by the troika before voting for them; he added that he disagrees with them now, although he energetically implemented them.

Or witness the attack by former prime minister Papandreou on the most powerful media empire, which has consistently supported the Pasok party, for undermining his personal authority. Its CEO replied in a leader that a commercial bank had refused his company a loan on the instruction of the prime minister. He added that later he was invited into the PM's office, was ushered in Murdoch-like from the back door to avoid detection, and was asked to offer unspecified services to the government.

Greek and European elites freely admit now that the austerity – which has led to the deepest depression since the 1930s – was wrong. Former Pasok prime minister Simitis, who led Greece to the eurozone in 2001, (when the current prime minister was the governor of the Bank of Greece) and was accused by Nicolas Sarkozy of fiddling the books to achieve accession, admitted this week in Berlin that the troika measures implemented by his anointed successor were a major mistake. As the elite ship collapses, its captains run for the boats. The belated apologies confirm the suspicion that the deficit was a pretext used by the establishment to impose their desired neoliberal policies.

But there is also the Greece of Angelopoulos. This Greece is represented by men like Dinos Christianopoulos, the greatest living poet of urban solitude and malaise, who refused a Greek Academy lifetime honour stating that he does not want their gongs or money although he lives on a pension of only €600. It is also represented by those who, throughout the country, choose to show solidarity with the homeless, unemployed and poor. Only this week, farmers protesting the devaluation of their produce offered tons of free vegetables to hundreds of Athenians in Syntagma, the square where the indignants occupation last year changed the political landscape by introducing the direct democracy now seen all over the world. Ordinary people who worked hard, did not evade tax and did not participate in the great loot of the last 20 years are everywhere reviving the Greek ethos of friendship, solidarity and hospitality – characteristics lost in the get-rich-quick period.

Angelopoulos speaks of a Greece and Europe far removed from bankers' bonuses and hedge funds. An MP of the extreme right, now in coalition government with the New Democracy and Pasok parties, stated yesterday that Angelopoulos's support for open borders and "internationalism" does not represent Greece. He is wrong.

In 1971, the funeral of Nobel prize winning Giorgos Seferis became a symbolic moment of the resistance against the colonels. Greece is not a dictatorship now, but Angelopoulos's untimely death may acquire a similar meaning – it has already led to nationwide soul-searching.

The struggle for the soul of the country is currently played out in assemblies, strikes and solidarity campaigns. Ordinary Greeks now have a historic chance to redefine the meaning and values of European civilisation.

Tuesday, January 03, 2012

Photography, Anthropology and History. Expanding the Frame



Photography, Anthropology and History. Expanding the Frame

Christopher Morton and Elizabeth Edwards (eds)
Ashgate, 2011


The book

Photography, Anthropology and History examines the complex historical relationship between photography and anthropology, and in particular the strong emergence of the contemporary relevance of historical images. Thematically organized, and focusing on the visual practices developed within anthropology as a discipline, this book brings together a range of contemporary and methodologically innovative approaches to the historical image within anthropology. Importantly, it also demonstrates the ongoing relevance of both the historical image and the notion of the archive to recent anthropological thought.

As current research rethinks the relationship between photography and anthropology, this volume will serve as a stimulus to this new phase of research as an essential text and methodological reference point in any course that addresses the relationship between anthropology and visuality.

Contents

Introduction, by Elizabeth Edwards and Christopher Morton

PART 1
Historicizing Visual Anthropology: 'Distempered daubs' and encyclopaedic world maps: the ethnographic significance of panoramas and mappaemundi, by Alison Griffiths;
Anthropology and the cinematic imagination, by David MacDougall.

PART2
Institutional Structures: Salvaging our past: photography and survival, by Elizabeth Edwards;
Frozen poses: Hamat'sa dioramas, recursive representation, and the making of a Kwakwaka'wakw icon, by Aaron Glass.

PART 3
Fieldwork: The initiation of Kamanga: visuality and textuality in Evans-Pritchard's Zande ethnography, by Christopher Morton;
'For scientific purposes a stand camera is essential': salvaging photographic histories in Papua, by Joshua A. Bell;
Visual methods in early Japanese anthropology: Torii Ryuzo in Taiwan, Ka F. Wong; Theodor Koch-Grünberg and visual anthropology in early 20th-century German anthropology, by Paul Hempel.

PART 4
Indigenous Histories: Faletau's photocopy, or the mutability of visual history in Roviana, by Christopher Wright;
John Layard long Malakula 1914–1915: the potency of field photography, by Anita Herle;
'Just by bringing these photographs…': on the other meanings of anthropological images, by Laura Peers and Alison K. Brown;

Sunday, December 04, 2011

CALL FOR FILMS


Intimate Lens: Festival of Visual Ethnography

Caserta (Italy) 8-11 December 2011

CALL FOR FILMS

Intimate Lens: Festival of Visual Ethnography claims to promote documentary cinema with special attention to anthropological topics and methodologies. The international character of the festival is in fact not only wanted but also unavoidable because of the specific vocation of the discipline and the applied media. In this first edition we chose not to proceed in further specializations of presences but to offer specific examples, different in filmic languages as well as represented geographic areas, aimed at suggesting to the audience, not only the professional one, a large view, even if of course not complete. We believe that his choice not only will spring a wide exchange of idea and themes but also an extensive collaborative perspective as well. The choice of topics of general interest, diversity and relevance for a general audience is obviously fundamental. The exotic becomes an outdated and unnecessary category and the doubtful will take place, according to a perspective that may catch through the intimate lends a contemporary and global dimension way beyond the local particular.

Created and organized by ©Aldo Colucciello/Augusto Ferraiuolo
with ©Bagaria/B.R.I.O. Associations
http://www.associazionebri o.eu/home.html



Send your film at the postal address below:

Augusto Ferraiuolo
Via Ienco 13
81100 Caserta
ITALY

Contacts:

Aldo Colucciello
coluc.al@libero.it

Augusto Ferraiuolo
augusto@bu.edu

Friday, September 23, 2011

New issue Visual Anthropology


Visual Anthropology

Vol. 24, n. 4 July-September 2011



SUMMARY

Giusto, Salvatore
La fabbrica dei sogni: Italian Cinematograhy, Collective Memory and National Identity

Fisher, Alexander
Between "the Housewife" and "the Philosophy Professor": Music, narration and Address in Ousmane Sembene's Xala

Zhu, Ping
Destruction, Moral Nihilism and the Poetics of Debris in Jia Zhangke's Still Life

Harris, Anne
Slowly by Slowly : Ethnocinema, Media and YoungWomen of the Sudanese Diaspora

Jain, Pankaj
From Padosi to My Name is Khan : Portrayal of Hindu-Muslim Relations in South Asian Films

Friedman, Kerim
From Thuigs to Victims: Dakxin Bajrange Chhara's Cinema of Justice

Jain, Pankaj
Such a Long Journey : Portrayal of the Parsi Community in Films

Media Reviews

Book Reviews

Monday, September 12, 2011

Made To Be Seen


Made To Be Seen: Perspectives on the History of Visual Anthropology

by Marcus Banks and Jay Ruby (eds)
University of Chicago Press, 2011



The book

Made to be Seen brings together leading scholars of visual anthropology to examine the historical development of this multifaceted and growing field. Expanding the definition of visual anthropology beyond more limited notions, the contributors to Made to be Seen reflect on the role of the visual in all areas of life. Different essays critically examine a range of topics: art, dress and body adornment, photography, the built environment, digital forms of visual anthropology, indigenous media, the body as a cultural phenomenon, the relationship between experimental and ethnographic film, and more.
The first attempt to present a comprehensive overview of the many aspects of an anthropological approach to the study of visual and pictorial culture, Made to be Seen will be the standard reference on the subject for years to come. Students and scholars in anthropology, sociology, visual studies, and cultural studies will greatly benefit from this pioneering look at the way the visual is inextricably threaded through most, if not all, areas of human activity.

Contents

Cristina Grasseni / Skilled visions : toward an ecology of visual inscriptions
Sandra Dudley / Material visions : dress and textiles
Roxana Waterson / Visual anthropology and the built environment : interpenetrations of the visible and the invisible
Arnd Schneider / Unfinished dialogues : notes toward an alternative history of art and anthropology
Brenda Farnell / Theorizing "the body" in visual culture
Elizabeth Edwards / Tracing photography
Matthew Durington and Jay Ruby / Ethnographic film
Sarah Pink / Digital visual anthropology : potentials and challenges
Faye Ginsburg / Native intelligence : a short history of debates on indigenous media and ethnographic film
Kathryn Ramey / Productive dissonance and sensuous image-making : visual anthropology and experimental film
Stephen Putnam Hughes / Anthropology and the problem of audience reception
Michael Herzfeld / Hindsight/postscript : ethical and epistemic reflections on/of anthropological vision

Monday, June 27, 2011

Cinema and Photography


Freeze Frames for a combination of cinema and photography


The symposium "Freeze Frames for a combination of cinema and photography"
"arrêts sur images" taking place in Paris at Musée du quai Branly on April 9th and 10th 2010, are now available on audio/podcast on website of musee du quai Branly through the link mentionned below :

http://www.quaibranly.fr/fr/programmation/manifestations-scientifiques/manifestations-passees/colloques-et-symposium/colloque-arrets-sur-images.html



colloque arrêts sur images
pour une combinaison de la photographie et du film
vendredi 9 et samedi 10 avril 2010, de 9h30 à 19h

salle de cinéma

ethnologues, sociologues, artistes et historiens de l’image sont invités à venir partager leurs expériences et leurs réflexions sur :

les manières de produire et d’articuler les images fixes et les images animées
les vertus respectives de ces images et de leur association

entrée libre dans la limite des places disponibles
introduction

Sylvaine CONORD, maître de conférences, université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense, Laboratoire d’Anthropologie Urbaine/IIAC, CNRS (UMR 8177)

session 1 : photographier et/ou filmer
Introduction

Discutant : Albert PIETTE, Professeur, université d’Amiens

Observer, photographier, filmer : journal du regard d’un ethnographe

Observe, Photograph, Film : an Ethnograph’s Diary Gaze

Annie MERCIER, Phanie, Centre de l’ethnologie et de l’image

Photographies pour l’anthropologie : de la mesure à l’échange

Photography for Anthropology : from Measuring to Inter-view

Marc PIAULT, directeur de recherches, CNRS

La photographie comme story board

Photography as Story-Board

Laurent PELLE, Comité du film ethnographique

session 2 : fixer l’animé, animer la fixité
Introduction

Discutant : Emmanuel GRIMAUD, chargé de recherches, CNRS

Dramaturgie de l’arrêt du temps et arrêts sur images : le montage des performances de Kutiyattam (Kerala, Inde du Sud)

Stop-in-time Dramarturgy and Frozen Images : Editing Kutiyattam Performances (Kerala, South india)

Virginie JOHAN, université Paris 3

Effleurer le réel. Le transit artistique des images : photo / vidéo /interstice

Brushing reality. Images in artistic transit : photography, video, opening

Alain MONS, université Bordeaux III / Isic

Les Cendres Sacrées à l’Âge de Kali : hybridité au débat

Holy Ashes in the Age of Kali : Hybridity Under debate

Lena TOSTA et Olivier BOËLS, université de Brasilia

Un pèlerinage de l’Himalaya raconté à partir de 16 photographies noir et blanc, 34 pages de journal de terrain et 6 mn de film super 8

An Himalayan pilgrimage narrated through 16 black and white photographs, 34 pages of fieldwork notes and 6 minutes of super8 film

Martino NICOLLETI, university of the West of Scotland
Bar Centre des autocars - projection du film de Patrick ZACHMANN, 52 mn

Projection animée par Jean ARLAUD, professeur émérite, université Paris 7

Dans les années 80, Patrick Zachmann, photographe à l'agence Magnum et réalisateur, a animé dans les quartiers nord de Marseille un stage de photographie avec des jeunes appartenant à la première génération issue de l'immigration. Il y rencontre Hacène, Nadia, César, Chrérif, Ali, Paul et les autres. En 2007, il part à leur recherche. Plus de vingt ans se sont écoulés entre les adolescents en difficulté qu'ils étaient et les adultes qu'ils sont devenus. Des parcours de vie singuliers qui font partie de notre histoire collective. Le film conjugue images fixes et images animées.

In the 80s, Patrick Zachmann, photographer at the agency Magnum and the director, taught a photography workshop in the North districts of Marseille with young people whose parents immigrate to France. That it’s where he met Hacène, Nadia, César, Chrérif, Ali, Paul and the others there. In 2007, he decided to meet them again. After more than twenty years, he could question how the teenagers he met became adults. He show us singular routes of life which are a part of our collective history. The movie mixes still and animated frame.

session 3 : prises de vues
introduction

Discutant : Cornelia ECKERT, université de Rio Grande del Sul

Photographie et vidéo : des modes d’expression étrangers ?

Photo and Video, the divergent ways of expression ?

Jean-Pierre DURAND et Joyce SEBAG, université d’Évry

La dimension sociale de la photographie numérique dans la photo-interview effectuée par des étudiants japonais

Social dimension of Digital Photography in Photo-interview pratices by Japanese students

Miura ATSUSHI, université de Saitama, Japon

Photographier ou filmer : vers un regard qui envisage l’autre.

Photography or Film : Toward a View that meditates on the Inner Self on the Other

Ralf MARSAULT, Phanie, Centre de l’ethnologie et de l’image

Temps et narration dans le cinéma et la photographie

Times and narratives for Cinema and Photography

Nomura NAOKI, université de Nagoya, Japon

session 4 : associer les images
introduction

Discutant : Marc PIAULT, directeur de recherches, CNRS
La mort au Japon : de la photographie au multimédia

Death in Japan : From Photography to multimedia

Fabienne DUTEIL-OGATA, LAU/IIAC CNRS/EHESS (UMR 8177)

Beauté et blaxploitation dans le cinéma et la photographie

Beauty and Blaxploitation in Film and Photography

Cheryl FINLEY, université de Cornell (USA) et Thomas Hank Willis

L’image fixe ou l’invisible de l’image animée

The Stationary of Image as the invisible of the animated image

Jacques LOMBARD, IRD

Anthropologie de la et dans la ville brésilienne : un démontage d’images pour rétablir le fil du temps

Anthropologist in Brazilian Cities : un-mounting images to reassemble the time

Cornélia ECKERT et Ana Luiza CARVALHO DA ROCHA, université de Rio Grande del Sul, Brésil

Clôture

Baptiste BUOB, docteur en anthropologie filmique



musée du quai Branly
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75007 – Paris
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